Pike Pine Parking Changes

Post on 23-Jan-2015

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Through SDOT's Community Parking Program, the City has been working with Pike/Pine to identify ways to improve on-street parking. After a year of work, the project is wrapping up. This slideshow shares information on the final parking plan and when these changes will take effect.

Transcript of Pike Pine Parking Changes

Seattle Department of Transportation’s Community Parking Program

The Community Parking Program:Parking Changes Coming to Pike/Pine

Seattle Department of Transportation’s Community Parking Program

Project background

Project boundary

April 2008 – project launch

Goal: City and neighborhood work together to:• Improve on-street parking• Support walking, biking, transit, and other sustainable transport options

Seattle Department of Transportation’s Community Parking Program

Since April 2008, SDOT has engaged the community via…

• Community meetings • Online survey• Door-to-door outreach• Parking study design• Developed proposed changes• Community comment period• Blog posts & press releases• And yes, we even created a

Facebook page

Seattle Department of Transportation’s Community Parking Program

Where are we now?

After reviewing community comments and study data, SDOT has made a final decision on parking changes in Pike/Pine.

Seattle Department of Transportation’s Community Parking Program

Next, you’ll see how parking looks now and how it will look after the changes are made.

Seattle Department of Transportation’s Community Parking Program

Current parking…

PARKING SPACE TYPESUnrestrictedTime LimitedRestricted parking zone (RPZ)2-hr PaidLoad ZoneNo Park/Bus Zone

NOTE: Maps DO NOT show all space types on each block (e.g. bus zones, driveways, disabled parking spaces, and load zones). For more detailed info, contact SDOT.

Seattle Department of Transportation’s Community Parking Program

…will change to

PARKING SPACE TYPES2-hr Time LimitRPZ 2-hr Paid3-hr Paid10-hr PaidRPZ w/2-hr PaidLoad ZoneNo Park/Bus Zone

New Zone 4blocks

New Zone 21blocks

Eligible for Zone 21 Permits

Eligible for Zone 4 Permits

Scooter and on-street bike parking

Add scooter spots

NOTE: Maps DO NOT show all space types on each block (e.g. bus zones, driveways, disabled parking spaces, and load zones). For more detailed info, contact SDOT.

Seattle Department of Transportation’s Community Parking Program

Key changes • 2-hr time limits

• 2-hr, 3-hr, & 10-hr paid parking

• RPZ access

• Add 2-hr paid parking to some RPZ blocks

• Bike and scooter spaces

Seattle Department of Transportation’s Community Parking Program

Details - RPZIf you live in the restricted parking zone (RPZ) eligibility areas defined on the map, we’ll send you a permit application for either Zone 4 or Zone 21, depending on your address.

• On RPZ blocks that will also have 2-hr pay stations, RPZ permit holders will be exempt from both the time limit and paid parking.

• Please note: You will only be exempt if you appropriately display your Zone 4 permit on a Zone 4 signed block; or Zone 21 permit on a Zone 21 signed block.

Seattle Department of Transportation’s Community Parking Program

Details – paid parking ratesIn a dense, lively neighborhood like Pike/Pine, paid parking Helps increase space availability and ease enforcement. A mix of short-term and long-term spaces will serve the needs of various users.

• 2-hr and 3-hr paid parking = $2/hr

• 10-hr paid parking = $1.25/hr

Seattle Department of Transportation’s Community Parking Program

When will parking change?

• JUNE: sign and pay station locations marked on sidewalk

• JULY: new parking signs and pay stations installed

Seattle Department of Transportation’s Community Parking Program

For more information

• Website: http://www.seattle.gov/transportation/parking/cp_pikepine.htm • Find us on Facebook – search for “SDOT Community

Parking Program”• Contact project manager Allison Schwartz at

PikePineParking@seattle.gov or (206) 684-8186